Originally posted by: alent1234
i can't remember how long ago 60 Minutes did a story on this. This has been going on for decades.
Originally posted by: daveshel
Originally posted by: alent1234
i can't remember how long ago 60 Minutes did a story on this. This has been going on for decades.
It had to have been all of 3 weeks ago.
Originally posted by: Genx87
This could be one of the worst written articles I have ever seen!
I am still trying to figure out how Bush is tied into this. Does he have special meetings to try and rip off some Indians in New Mexico?
Without better evidence which this site reportedly thinks it has. I would have to look at their case as taking 1 problem and using another problem to get it solved.
It seems some trust fund was raided so to get that money back they are going to sue over pipeline royalty payments?
btw who negotiates the royalty payments? Indians or Govt? I couldnt tell from the story.
Originally posted by: judasmachine
This saddens me as most of my family is from the Pine Ridge reservation. It's really bad there, and there is no oppurtunity except to leave your home. I know that to alot of you guys it's OK to leave home, as you all do it to go to college. But in the Indian culture it's a less accepted mode of living. We don't want to have to live by your ways, we wish to live by ours, and there simply isn't enough room or capital to make that kind of investment. So most sit there in poverty, and quietly teach history to each other in a differant way. Those of you who think you know your American Indian history, I have a little interjection to make. Our history is thousands of years old, it didn't miracuously start in 1492 like you think it did. We watch, wait, and suffer while your culture destroys everything sacred to us. And your boy Bush is making it even harder to try and live the way we want. I am diminished by everyone of my brothers that starves on reservations, or is converted to this Xtian cult, or is forced to leave the reservation to feed his family properly.
shii shi keyah
Oh and if it wasn't for the Navajo's willingness to help, the Pacific part of WW2 wouldn't have gone as well.
An investigation by SmartMoney.com has found that officials in the Bush administration had detailed knowledge of fraudulent practices that allowed energy companies to cheat impoverished Native American Indians out of vast sums over dozens of years.
These things are supposed to exist in an administration. Ultimately responsibility rests not only with those who are wrong doing but also those looking the other way when its their responsibility to look after these people who are doing wrong.
Regardless of how some people want to twist this into something its not there is one incontrovertible fact.
Ignorance is not a defense.
Unless you are suggesting that those in power be immune to law.
*note that those in power are already immune to many laws, usually granted to themselves, both at the executive and other levels of government both state and federal.
Originally posted by: bamacre
An investigation by SmartMoney.com has found that officials in the Bush administration had detailed knowledge of fraudulent practices that allowed energy companies to cheat impoverished Native American Indians out of vast sums over dozens of years.
Wow, Bush has been president for dozens of years? Whoa! Where am I? Wait, what year is this?
Originally posted by: Genx87
These things are supposed to exist in an administration. Ultimately responsibility rests not only with those who are wrong doing but also those looking the other way when its their responsibility to look after these people who are doing wrong.
Does the administration directly conytrol the reservation and the price setting on the royalty payments?
If they do the story didnt lay that out very well.
They don't need to control it directly to be held accountable. The article suggests those involved at the top are appointed to those posts by Bush and Co. Is this not true?
Regardless of how some people want to twist this into something its not there is one incontrovertible fact.
Ignorance is not a defense.
What fact? Does the administration run this program? If you can point me to some information that shows it does then maybe we can have an intelligent conversation about this. Currently the story linked lays down a bunch of conjecture with little evidence. They cant even make a clean cut tie to the administration.
See above.
p.s. What kind of assinine comment are you going to come up with next?
Unless you are suggesting that those in power be immune to law.
Depends on a few things.
A. Are the people who are in the position of power you refer to accountable for this? Do they run it, if so, what role do they play?
B. Were any laws broken?
Depends? Since when does accountability depend when you appoint people to posts that are then abused. Does accountability come to a dead stop only when you, be that anyone, has a finger pointed your way and get called on it "You sir put this scumbag in charge!"
*note that those in power are already immune to many laws, usually granted to themselves, both at the executive and other levels of government both state and federal.
If this is against the law then they wont be immune to the law.
But I think we or at least I need a couple of questions answered.
A. Who negotiates the royalty payments for the Indians?
B. How is the Bush administration tied to this?
The article throws out some bait but nothing really connects.
What do you mean by "if this is against the law..."? You have got to be kidding me.
For your 1st point that is looking for a scapegoat. Here's a hint. Stop looking for one. All of these people named are responsible and then some. Not just a handful of people who will most likely get a convenient finger pointed at by the administration. As to your second point see my first comment.
Article states:Originally posted by: Aelius
They don't need to control it directly to be held accountable. The article suggests those involved at the top are appointed to those posts by Bush and Co. Is this not true?
They don't need to control it directly to be held accountable. The article suggests those involved at the top are appointed to those posts by Bush and Co. Is this not true?
See above.
p.s. What kind of assinine comment are you going to come up with next?
Depends? Since when does accountability depend when you appoint people to posts that are then abused. Does accountability come to a dead stop only when you, be that anyone, has a finger pointed your way and get called on it "You sir put this scumbag in charge!"
What do you mean by "if this is against the law..."? You have got to be kidding me.
For your 1st point that is looking for a scapegoat. Here's a hint. Stop looking for one. All of these people named are responsible and then some. Not just a handful of people who will most likely get a convenient finger pointed at by the administration. As to your second point see my first comment.
Originally posted by: judasmachine
This saddens me as most of my family is from the Pine Ridge reservation. It's really bad there, and there is no oppurtunity except to leave your home. I know that to alot of you guys it's OK to leave home, as you all do it to go to college. But in the Indian culture it's a less accepted mode of living. We don't want to have to live by your ways, we wish to live by ours, and there simply isn't enough room or capital to make that kind of investment. So most sit there in poverty, and quietly teach history to each other in a differant way. Those of you who think you know your American Indian history, I have a little interjection to make. Our history is thousands of years old, it didn't miracuously start in 1492 like you think it did. We watch, wait, and suffer while your culture destroys everything sacred to us. And your boy Bush is making it even harder to try and live the way we want. I am diminished by everyone of my brothers that starves on reservations, or is converted to this Xtian cult, or is forced to leave the reservation to feed his family properly.
shii shi keyah
Oh and if it wasn't for the Navajo's willingness to help, the Pacific part of WW2 wouldn't have gone as well.
Originally posted by: Pliablemoose
Originally posted by: judasmachine
This saddens me as most of my family is from the Pine Ridge reservation. It's really bad there, and there is no oppurtunity except to leave your home. I know that to alot of you guys it's OK to leave home, as you all do it to go to college. But in the Indian culture it's a less accepted mode of living. We don't want to have to live by your ways, we wish to live by ours, and there simply isn't enough room or capital to make that kind of investment. So most sit there in poverty, and quietly teach history to each other in a differant way. Those of you who think you know your American Indian history, I have a little interjection to make. Our history is thousands of years old, it didn't miracuously start in 1492 like you think it did. We watch, wait, and suffer while your culture destroys everything sacred to us. And your boy Bush is making it even harder to try and live the way we want. I am diminished by everyone of my brothers that starves on reservations, or is converted to this Xtian cult, or is forced to leave the reservation to feed his family properly.
shii shi keyah
Oh and if it wasn't for the Navajo's willingness to help, the Pacific part of WW2 wouldn't have gone as well.
I've been on every reservation in the Dakotas & my parents lived on one for ~5 years, my mother was an employee of the tribe...
The OP seems to want to lay the blame on the current administration, and I feel that's very short sighted & self serving, the dominant culture in North America needs to take a shared responsibility in the centuries long bad faith shown to the native populations.
Originally posted by: Genx87
Assinine because I ask where the beef is?